Inside Microsoft’s headquarters in Redmond, Washington, there is a room where sound behaves in an unfamiliar way. Noise from the outside does not enter, and any sound made within its walls fades almost at once. The space is known as an anechoic chamber, designed to absorb echoes completely rather than reflect them. A simple clap of the hands disappears in seconds, leaving a stillness that can feel unnatural. During ultra sensitive testing, the average background noise level was measured at minus 20.35 decibels. According to the World Record Academy, that reading set a record for the world’s quietest room. The figure sits below the threshold of human hearing, making the chamber one of the most silent controlled environments ever constructed for scientific and acoustic testing purposes.
Microsoft’s anechoic chamber holds record as the world’s quietest room
The chamber is built as a room within a room. A large masonry and concrete shell is lined with thick steel plates. Inside that sits a smaller steel chamber supported on vibration-absorbing springs. The goal is isolation, both from airborne sound and structural vibration.The interior is covered with heavy insulation and glass fibre wedges extending about 85 centimetres into the space. These wedges line the walls, ceiling and floor. Visitors stand on a suspended mesh floor above more wedges below. The background noise inside the chamber is so low that it approaches what mathematicians describe as the theoretical limit of silence. It is close to the absolute zero of sound, a point beyond which there is almost nothing left to measure. The only quieter environment would be a vacuum, where sound cannot travel at all because there is no air to carry it. In practical terms, the room represents the lowest level of sound ever recorded in a controlled setting. By that measure, it stands as the quietest place in the world.
Measuring sound below the noise floor
Because the room is quieter than the electrical hiss of most equipment, standard measurement tools are not sufficient. Engineers used two Brüel and Kjær type 4145 microphones, each with its own preamplifier.Electrical noise differs randomly between channels, while the true room signal remains consistent. By cross correlating both recordings and isolating matching elements, technicians derived the final reading. It is a technical process, but necessary when the signal is almost indistinguishable from silence itself.
How companies use anechoic chambers
Anechoic chambers are used to test sound from products with high precision. Microsoft, among others, relies on such facilities to examine microphones, headphones and speakers. The chambers also help analyse subtle noises from keyboards, cooling fans and display components.Devices such as Surface tablets, Xbox consoles and HoloLens headsets have undergone acoustic testing in similar environments. Software products with strong audio elements, including Skype and the Cortana assistant, have also benefited. In spaces like this, even the smallest hum becomes visible.
